Laberdolive 1986 Vintage Bas Armagnac Domaine de Jaurrey 700ml
In the Laberdolive range at Blackwell's, the 1979 is the mythical vintage — the largest harvest on record, the spirit of paradoxical freshness, the 98-point producer's peak expression. The 1942 is the historical document — distilled in Vichy France, the WWII masterpiece, the 96–100-point Wine Enthusiast rarity. The 1986 is something different from both: the approachable elder. The bottle that introduces you to what Laberdolive actually does, at 37 years of age, without requiring the reverence that the 1923, 1942, or even the 1979 demands before it can be fully appreciated. The VertdeVin professional tasting panel awarded 97/100 to the 1986 Domaine de Jaurrey — making it one of the highest-scored expressions in a range that is itself the benchmark of the entire Armagnac appellation. The Bozzy.org reviewer who was blown away by the 1979 found the 1986 more accessible and more immediately pleasant: "incredibly easy to drink because of its sweetness — very pleasant and satisfying throughout." CaskCartel's note is equally direct: "extremely rich and very balanced in flavor — lingering finish." Master of Malt called it "another smashing bottling" with a nose that is "complex yet not overwhelming." What the 1986 delivers that the older vintages cannot — or more accurately, what it delivers differently — is accessibility without sacrifice. Fino sherry and cloves on the nose. Old hardwood furniture and vintage leather with air. Star anise and caraway seeds adding spice. Cooked raisins, prunes, dates, and cinnamon on the palate. Vanilla, plum, and cocoa adding richness. At 46% ABV, incredibly easy to drink for a spirit of 37-plus years. The 1986 is not trying to overwhelm you with its history or its depth. It is, at its most fundamental, a masterfully aged Bas-Armagnac from the finest estate in the appellation — doing exactly what great aged Gascon brandy should do: inviting you to sit down, pay attention, and enjoy. Origins & Craftsmanship The Laberdolive family has been producing Bas-Armagnac at the Domaine de Jaurrey since 1893 — in Labastide d'Armagnac, nestled between the Landes and the Gers departments in the heart of the Bas-Armagnac zone. The estate sits on sables fauves — the golden tawny sandy soils that are the finest terroir in the finest Armagnac subregion — and uses the four grape varieties that together define the estate's specific character: Colombard, Ugni Blanc, Folle Blanche, and Baco, each distilled and aged separately before blending as the Laberdolive family's judgment dictates. The 1986 growing season followed five years after the mythical 1979, with Gascony experiencing the more temperate, moderate conditions that produce vintage Armagnac of classic structure and balance rather than the extraordinary abundance of a generational harvest. The 1986's character — sweeter than spicy, refined rather than pungent, accessible rather than overwhelming — reflects a vintage whose natural conditions produced grapes of good quality and natural sweetness without the specific intensity that either the abundant 1979 or the low-yield, high-acid years produce in the barrel. The eaux-de-vie were distilled in the alambic armagnacais — the traditional Gascon continuous column still — at low proof, preserving the maximum flavor complexity of the base wine. They then aged in oak pieces made from the wood of the property itself — the most specifically terroir-connected barrel program available in any French brandy appellation, where the trees that grew on the same land as the vines contributed their own oak character to the spirit's development. The 1986 was bottled in 2019 at 46% ABV — after 33 years in those property-oak casks — designated "grand cru" by the négociants Laberdolive, confirming its placement at the highest quality tier of the estate's vintage range. Critics Reviews VertdeVin — 97/100 (18.5/20) — Tasted April 2015, retasted March 2026: Professional tasting diploma awarded to the Laberdolive 1986 Domaine de Jaurrey. Among the highest scores in the Laberdolive range and confirming the 1986's position as one of the estate's most consistently excellent and most professionally recognized expressions. Bozzy.org (2017 bottling, tasted 2018): "Nose: Fino sherry, cloves and nutmeg. A little thin at first — after airing, more oak and spice aromas evolve. Old hardwood furniture, vintage leather and cinnamon sticks. Star anise and caraway seeds. Palate: Sweet rather than being spicy — cooked raisins and prunes, dates and cinnamon. Incredibly easy to drink because of its sweetness and thin palate — very pleasant and satisfying throughout." Bottle of Italy: "Opens with intensely aromatic notes of vanilla and plum, accompanied by hints of cocoa and leather, evidence of a long rest in the cellar." David Ridgway, chef-sommelier, La Tour d'Argent, Paris: "Laberdolive is considered for a long time to be the benchmark of Armagnac." Tasting Profile Nose Clear dark copper with slow, thin legs — 33-plus years in property oak barrels producing a color of warm, refined amber. The nose is the 1986's most gently complex quality: not the pungent, scintillating intensity of the 1942 or the paradoxical freshness of the 1979, but the more measured, refined elegance of a vintage whose natural conditions produced spirit of classical balance. Fino sherry arrives first — the slightly oxidative, slightly nutty quality that long-aged Armagnac from the sables fauves sandy soils develops in the specific direction of fino rather than Oloroso, lighter and more elegant than the heavier sherry-adjacent character of richer vintages. Cloves and nutmeg add warm spice. Air opens the nose considerably — old hardwood furniture and vintage leather emerging with a patina of genuine age and gentle complexity. Cinnamon sticks add warm baking spice. Star anise and caraway seeds add the most specifically Laberdolive aromatic dimension — the slightly wild, slightly exotic spice note that the estate's sables fauves terroir and the traditional alambic armagnacais distillation consistently produce across its finest vintages. Vanilla adds American oak-adjacent warmth. Plum adds dark fruit depth. Palate Extremely rich and very balanced — the CaskCartel assessment confirmed from the first sip as the 1986's most fundamental and most reliable palate quality. The entry is sweet rather than spicy — a distinction that is both accurate and important for positioning the 1986 within the Laberdolive range: where the 1942 hits with concentrated, bittersweet rancio intensity and the 1979 delivers paradoxical freshness, the 1986 opens with the warmth and sweetness of cooked raisins and prunes arriving first. Dates add further dried fruit depth. Cinnamon carries through from the nose into the palate with the building, gentle warmth that aged Armagnac's most accessible spice dimension produces. Cocoa and vanilla add secondary richness alongside the leather. The 46% ABV delivers genuine presence — warm and sustained — but the "incredibly easy to drink" characterization from the Bozzy.org reviewer is entirely accurate: the sweetness and the refined balance work together to produce a spirit that gives itself generously to the drinker rather than demanding patience or reverence. Finish Lingering and gently warming. The cooked fruit character — raisins, prunes, dates — carries the close most persistently alongside vanilla and a final gentle spice warmth from the cloves and cinnamon. The rancio is present but discreet — confirming the 1986's specific position in the Laberdolive range as a more accessible and less rancio-dominant expression than the older, more concentrated vintages. The oak makes its presence known at the very close — the property-wood casks' 33-year contribution settling into a dry, clean conclusion that is deeply satisfying without demanding further attention. The finish is the 1986's most quietly impressive quality: lingering in the way that great Armagnac always lingers, but doing so gently and without the overwhelming intensity that separates the 1986's welcoming character from the older vintages' more demanding profundity. Quick Overview Category Details Appellation Grand Cru Bas-Armagnac — Gascony, France Vintage 1986 Bottled 2019 Age at Bottling 33 years Age in 2026 40 years Producer Laberdolive — Domaine de Jaurrey Location Labastide d'Armagnac — between Landes and Gers Terroir Sables fauves — golden tawny sandy soils Grape Varieties Colombard · Ugni Blanc · Folle Blanche · Baco — distilled separately Still Alambic armagnacais — traditional continuous column still Casks Oak pieces from property wood — most terroir-connected barrel program in French brandy Designation Grand Cru — highest quality tier ABV 46% ABV 1986 Vintage Character Moderate, balanced — sweet rather than pungent — accessible and refined Critics VertdeVin 97/100 (18.5/20) — professional tasting diploma Range Position The approachable elder — most accessible Laberdolive in the Blackwell's range Style / Identity Refined, sweet-leaning 40-year Bas-Armagnac — dried fruit, spice, leather, vanilla, cocoa Aromas & Flavors Fino sherry, cloves, nutmeg, old hardwood, vintage leather, cinnamon, star anise, caraway seeds, vanilla, plum, cooked raisins, prunes, dates, cinnamon, cocoa Bottle Size 700ml Serving & Occasion Neat in a tulip-shaped brandy glass at room temperature — the 1986's sweet, accessible character opens within minutes rather than requiring the 20-to-30-minute patience that the older, more concentrated vintages demand. Allow 10 minutes of air for the old hardwood, leather, and star anise notes to fully evolve from the fino sherry opening. No ice, no accompaniment beyond the glass and the occasion. The Bozzy.org reviewer's "incredibly easy to drink" characterization makes this the most approachable introduction to Laberdolive quality in the Blackwell's range — the bottle to open with a dinner guest who is curious about vintage Armagnac but not yet ready for the 1942's overwhelming rancio intensity or the 1979's mythical vintage demands.
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